Jin He-ling
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Jin He-ling.
Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences | 1998
Li Bao-sheng; Jin He-ling; Lü Haiyan; Zhu Yi-zhi; Dong Guangrong; Sun Donghuai; Zhang Jiashen; Gao Quan-zhou; Yan Mancun
Abstract“Milanggouwan stratigraphical section” named lately takes down 27 cycles of alternately evolutionary histories of desert depositions in the Mu Us area with the fluviolacustrine facies and palaeosols since 150 ka B. P. Studies show that the sedimentary form was induced by the growth and decline and confrontation each other between the winter monsoon and the summer monsoon of East Asia in the past 150 ka.
Journal of Geographical Sciences | 2001
Zhang Yu-hong; Li Bao-sheng; Jin He-ling; David D. Zhang; Yan Mun-cun; Zhu Yi-zhi; Ya O Chun-xia
The palaeo-mobile dune sands and fluvio-lacustrine facies with palaeosols in Milanggouwan stratigraphic section of the Salawusu River valley situated at the southeast of the Mu Us Desert experienced abundant remarkable alternative changes of coarse and fine rhythms in grainsize since 150 ka BP, and the grain-size parameters — Mz, σ, Sk, Kg and SC/D also respond to the situation of multi-fluctuational alternations between peak and valley values. Simultaneity the grainsize eigenvalues — ϕ5, ϕ16, ϕ25, ϕ50, ϕ75, ϕ84 and ϕ95 are respondingly manifested as greatly cadent jumpiness. Hereby, the Milanggouwan section can be divided into 27 grain-size coarse and fine sedimentary cycles, which can be regarded as a real and integrated record of climate-geological process of desert vicissitude resulted from the alternative evolvement of the ancient winter and summer monsoons of East Asia since 150 ka BP.
Chinese Geographical Science | 1995
Dong Guangrong; Dong Yuxiang; Li Sen; Jin Jiong; Jin He-ling; Liu Yu-zhang
The middle reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo River and its two tributaries are an important development and construction region in Xizang (Tibet) in recent years, but the fast development of desertification has caused immense damages to its social and economic development, so the study on desertification in this region is significant. The paper studies the causes and development trend of desertification in this region through analysis of natural and human factors as well as their relationship. It can be concluded that desertification in the study area is one process which is accelerated and intensified by human activities on the basis of the slow natural desertification process. It is resulted from the dislocation of irrational and intensive human activities, fragile eco-environment and meagre natural resources, and tends to become more wide and severe.The middle reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo River and its two tributaries are an important development and construction region in Xizang (Tibet) in recent years, but the fast development of desertification has caused immense damages to its social and economic development, so the study on desertification in this region is significant. The paper studies the causes and development trend of desertification in this region through analysis of natural and human factors as well as their relationship. It can be concluded that desertification in the study area is one process which is accelerated and intensified by human activities on the basis of the slow natural desertification process. It is resulted from the dislocation of irrational and intensive human activities, fragile eco-environment and meagre natural resources, and tends to become more wide and severe.
Journal of Geographical Sciences | 2002
Yao Chun-xial; Li Bao-sheng; Jin He-ling; David D. Zhang; Yan Man-cun; Zhu Yi-zhi; Li Hou-xin; Zhang Yu-hong; Luo Kai-li
The paper makes some analyses on 11 trace elements in the Milanggouwan stratigraphical section in the Salawusu River valley, which is regarded as a prototype geology-palaeoclimate record since 150 ka BP. The results show that the content and variation of trace elements has experienced remarkably regular changes in the pace with coarse and fine sedimentary cycles of palaeo-aeolian sands to its overlying fluvio-lacustrine facies or/and palaeosols. The trace elements with chemical properties of relatively active (V, Sr, Cu, Ni, As) and relatively stable (P, Pb, Rb, Mn, Nb, Zr) are a manifestation of the corresponding 27 changeable cycles between peak and valley values, appearing a multi-fiuctuational process line of relative gathering and migration since then. The low numerical value distribution of these two types of trace elements in the aeolian sand facies represents erosion and accumulation under wind force during the cold-dry climate. Whereas their enrichments in both fluvio-lacustrine facies and palaeosols are related to the valley’s special low-lying physiognomic position between the Ordos Plateau and the Loess Plateau under the warm and humid climate conditions. The above relatively migrated and gathered change of the trace elements is the result of 27 climatic cycles of cold-dry and warm-humid, which is probably caused by repeated alternations of winter monsoon and summer monsoon in the Mu Us Sandy Land influenced by the climate vicissitudes in northern hemisphere during glacial and interglacial periods since 150 ka BP.
Journal of Desert Research | 2006
Su Zhi-zhu; Lu Qi; Wu Bo; Jin He-ling; Dong Guang-rong; Sfa Key
Journal of Desert Research | 2005
Li Yun-zhuo; Li Bao-sheng; Gao Quan-zhou; Jin He-ling
Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2010
Li Baosheng; David D. Zhang; Zhou Xingjia; Zhu Feng; Yuan Baoyin; Mu Guijin; Li Sen; Yan Mancun; Jin He-ling; Gao Quan-zhou; Sun Wu
Acta Geological Sinica | 2007
Jin He-ling
Chinese Geographical Science | 2001
Luo Kai-li; Li Bao-sheng; Zhu Yi-zhi; Jin He-ling; Zhang Dian; Yan Mancun; Li Hou-xin; Yao Chun-xia; Zhang Yu-hong
Journal of Desert Research | 2009
Jin He-ling